THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
October 19, 2020 at 13:03 JST
Cars are parked to be exported at Yokohama port, near Tokyo on Sept. 29. (AP Photo)
The drop in Japanese exports diminished last month, according to government data released Monday, underlining how trade damage from the coronavirus pandemic may be easing.
Japan’s exports in September were down by 4.9 percent from the same month a year ago, better than the nearly 15 percent decline recorded in August, Finance Ministry data showed.
The nation’s imports fell 17.2 percent overall, but exports to China gained 14 percent, the ministry said. Exports to the U.S. inched up 0.7 percent, in another possible sign of a gradual rebound. By sector, exports to the world in computers surged nearly 45 percent. Imports had fallen 20.8 percent in August from a year earlier.
Japan’s export-reliant economy has sunk into recession, with three straight quarters of contraction, through June, as the outbreak slammed business activity and deadened trade.
But a recovery in China, where COVID-19 emerged late last year, as well as recoveries elsewhere in Asia, are helping prod along a recovery for Japan.
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, who took office a month ago, is now traveling to Vietnam and Indonesia, where virus cases are relatively low, to drum up business and trade.
His predecessor, Shinzo Abe, had tried to sustain economic growth with his “Abenomics” package of programs based on zero interest rates and curtailing deflation.
Suga, from the same Liberal Democratic Party, is expected to carry on the policies, now dubbed “Suganomics.”
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